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A14923 The soules progresse to the celestiall Canaan, or heavenly Jerusalem By way of godly meditation, and holy contemplation: accompanied with divers learned exhortations, and pithy perswasions, tending to Christianity and humanity. Divided into two parts. The first part treateth of the divine essence, quality and nature of God, and his holy attributs: and of the creation, fall, state, death, and misery of an unregenerated man, both in this life and in the world to come: put for the whole scope of the Old Testament. The second part is put for the summe and compendium of the Gospell, and treateth of the Incarnation, Nativity, words, works, and sufferings of Christ, and of the happinesse and blessednesse of a godly man in his state of renovation, being reconciled to God in Christ. Collected out of the Scriptures, and out of the writings of the ancient fathers of the primitive Church, and other orthodoxall divines: by John Welles, of Beccles in the County of Suffolk. Welles, John, of Beccles. 1639 (1639) STC 25231; ESTC S119607 276,075 406

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us enquire for him at the mercy of his Father let us enquire at his owne righteousnesse let us seeke him in his holy sufferings let us seeke him at the crosse of his death and when wee have there found him let us expose our griefe and implore his favour let us shew him what the Law hath done unto us what wounds and how dangerous it hath given our soules How to implore his favour let us therefore confesse our sins and professe our faith let us also promise to correct the errors of our life let us carefully endeavour every circumstance he hath commanded us and being thus rectified in our resolution let us reach our particular hand of faith to our salvation How to apprehend Christ apprehend him and apply him to our wounded conscience and by this blessed meanes satisfie the justice of the Law and restore our soules Of the purity of Conscience IN every thing thou takest in hand have a care of thy conscience if the Divell incites thee to any sin stand in feare of thy conscience for thy conscience within thee condemneth thee if thou art afraid to sin in the presence of men let thy conscience much more deterre thee from sinning the inward testimony of thy conscience is of more efficacy then the testimony of men for though thy sins could escape the accusation of all men yet can they never escape the inward witnesse of thy conscience Reve. 20.12 the register of thy conscience shall bee in the number of those bookes that shall be opened at the day of judgement the conscience is a great volumne in which all things are written by the finger of truth The damned cannot deny their sinnes at the day of judgement because they shall bee convinced by the testimony of their owne conscience they cannot flie from the accusation of their sinnes because the tribunall of the conscience is at home and with them a pure conscience is the cleare glasse of the soule in which she manifestly beholds God and her selfe this booke of thy conscience should indeed be written according to the copy of the booke of life Christs Gospell is the booke of life Reve. 13.4 Phil. 4.3 let the profession of thy faith be conformed according to the rule of Christs doctrine and let the course of thy life be conformed according to the rule of Christs life thy conscience cannot but bee good if there be purity in thy heart truth in thy tongue and honesty in thy actions these will avoide the judgement of thy conscience in which one and the same shall bee both defendant and plaintife witnesse judge tormentor scourge and executioner what escape can there be where it is the witnesse that accuseth thee and where nothing can be hid from him that judgeth thee what doth it profit thee to live in all abundance and plenty and to be tormented with the whip of conscience the fountaine of mans felicity and misery is in his minde what then doth it profit a man in a burning feaver to lie in a bed of gold what doth it profit a man to enjoy all outward felicity and to be tormented with the firebrands of an ill conscience as much as we regard everlasting salvation so much let us regard our conscience for if wee have not a good conscience we have not faith and if we have not faith we have not the grace of God and if wee have not the grace of God how can wee hope for everlasting life as the judgement of thy conscience is such judgement thou mayst expect from Christ Sinne whilst it is in the action doth blind the minde and like a thicke cloud doth obscure the brightnesse of true judgement but at length the conscience is roused and gnaweth more grievously then any accuser There are three judgements the judgement of the world the judgement of thy selfe and the judgement of God and as thou canst not escape the judgement of God neither canst thou escape the judgement of thy selfe although thou mayst sometime escape the judgement of the world nothing can hinder thy conscience from seeing all thy actions What excuse then can save thee when thy conscience within thee doth accuse thee Note the peace of conscience is the beginning of everlasting life for by Gods judgement and thine owne thou shalt be either saved or fall everlastingly the conscience is immortall as the soule is immortall and the punishment of hell shall torment the damned as long as the accusation of conscience shall endure no externall fire doth so affect the body as the inward fire doth inflame the conscience the soule tormented is eternall and so is the fire of conscience eternall no outward scourge is so grievous to the body as these whips of conscience are unto the soule Avoid therefore the guilt of sinne that so thou mayst avoyd the torment of conscience blot out thy sinnes out of the booke of thy conscience by true and hearty repentance that they be not brought forth and read at the day of judgement against thee that so thou mayst avoyd the feare of Gods dreadfull sentence against thee mortifie the worme of conscience by the heat of devotion that it doe not devour thee and beget eternall horrour extinguish the heate of this inward fire by the teares of repentance 2 Tim. 4.7 that so thou mayst attaine to the joyes of heavenly happinesse Grant O Lord that we may fight this good fight keeping faith and a good conscience that at length we may come safe and sound into our heavenly Countrey to our eternall joy and endlesse comfort Of the accusation of Conscience EVery man that would prevent the dreadfull danger of Gods generall judgement must in this life while he hath time arrest his owne soule examine his particular actions and by the evidence of his conscience judge himselfe and his transgressions against the Law of God 1 Pet. 4.17 Prov. 11.3 c. for as Gods judgement doth begin at his owne house because his principall care is for his owne the Elect so should men judge themselves and have principall care to examine their owne particulars and as Saint Paul saith When we are judged we are chastened of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 32. because wee should not bee condemned with the world So likewise we must judge our selves lest we be condemned with the world for as the Israelites because they wanted judges became idolaters Iudges 17.6 Eccle. 18.19 so our lives when they are not examined and judged by our consciences wee become remisse disobedient idolatrous and desperately runne on with licentious and lawlesse appetite in the common and curious committing of sinne And this necessary judging of our selves is well knowne to our reasonable soules who when we have committed sinne provoke our conscience to accuse and judge us as if without this judging of our selves wee could not prevent the judgement of God By judging of our selves we prevent the heavy judgement of God the manner
this is when men give themselves over to commit sin with affectation and greedy appetite and oppresse their conscience with the multitude of their committings so that such conscience doth not remember us our sins for the outragious conscience in the Reprobate is when the conscience of the Reprobate hath for a time beene silenced and hath given the sinner an unchaste liberty in his ungodlinesse yet so as that once apprehending the knowledge of his sin and knowing the state of condemnation wherein it is it breaketh out into violence which wanting moderation urgeth the sinne● to execute upon himselfe some desperate vengeance such was the conscience of Judas the traitor which slept all the time hee was plotting and practising his treason but when his sinne was brought into act then his conscience though evill did upbraid his sin with such violence as made the griefe unsupportable and the traitor not able to indure the torment of his conscience thought as Caine that his sin was greater then the mercy of God and so despairing of mercy he desperately hanged himselfe Mat. 27.3 4 5. such is the conscience of the Reprobate their conscience is sleepy and doth reprove but seldome yet when it doth reprove it is then most terrible and without all comfort and though conscience in this life never afflict for sin but seeme senslesse and dead in its appointed offices yet in the day of judgement Rev. 20.12 when the booke of every mans conscience shall be opened then will their consciences that in this life have beene most silent be most loud and terrible in their accusations denouncing judgement Wisd 17.9 10 11. and inflicting a greater torment on the soule then the damned can have patience to beare this is both the office and end of an evill conscience A good conscience Now the conscience of the childe of grace is in full opposition to the conscience of the Reprobate for when God shall please to call his servants to the knowledge of themselves How God moveth the conscience and to a detestation of their sin the grace of his holy spirit moveth in the hearts of such and first awaketh the conscience and giveth it sense to understand the calamity of the soule and spirit to reprove and admonish it in needfull directions and this grace of God giving the conscience sence to understand sinne and spirit to reprove it is the first degree of our reformation and a preparation to our spirituall conversion God himselfe being the prime and principall author thereof When God doth stirre our conscience it continueth that holy motion to our reformation for when our conscience is once touched with this godly desire to examine the errors of our life God doth not then leave us but giveth us assistance continually to finish that needfull care without despaire without fainting the conscience being once instructed by grace understandeth that the soule is in danger of Gods judgement this knowledge causeth a desire in the soule to examine the particulars of our life then doth it compare our severall actions The manner how a good conscience worketh with the severall duties of the Law and thereby is made manifest the many and great defects and transgressions of our life and that therefore our soules and bodies are guilty and stand in the danger of condemnation From this knowledge doth arise the griefe of a wounded conscience for the statute Law of God condemning us for the trespasse of our lives The cause of the griefe of conscience the conscience then whose office is to excuse or accuse upbraideth our sinne and denouncing the judgement of the Law against us which is eternall damnation neither can we free our soules from these extremities untill God who is the judge of all the world shall please to offer mercy and the benefit of his cleargy which is nothing else but the story of the meritorious sufferings of Jesus Christ the Lambe of God which is in spirituall characters upon the crosse of his death and this booke being the testament and writ with the blood of Christ the most righteous God presents to all the world all the world in respect of themselves being guilty and condemned by the Law doth promise remission of sinnes How to quiet the trouble of ● grieved conscience a generall pardon to all them that with their eyes or faith shall be seene and read in the booke of life and apprehend and apply Jesus Christ the contents thereof to their salvation Thus and but thus it is possible to quiet the trouble of a grieved conscience the conscience being never satisfied for sinne before the justice of God be satisfied by the apprehensive righteousnesse of Jesus Christ Rom. 5.1 and therefore saith Saint Paul Being then justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ for before we can live to God wee must die to our selves neither is there a spirituall regeneration where there is not first a spirituall mortification and where grace would enter sinne must avoyd for he that would follow Christ must deny himselfe therefore let no man presume to apprehend the mystery of the righteousnesse of the Crosse of Christ before hee hath reformed his actions quieted the clamour of his conscience and utterly denyed the strength of his owne nature for how shall hee beare the Crosse of Christ No man can be able to apprehend Christ before his conscience hath thus prepared him that is laden with his owne infirmities or how shall hee be benefited by the promise of the Gospell that doth not first judge himselfe by the Commandements of the Law for hee that knoweth not his disease seeketh no physicke and Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance This doth admonish all men carefully to watch the behaviour of their lives Revel 20.12 for if the conscience of every man be a book wherein is writ the records of all his actions good and bad and that seeing this booke must be read at the day of judgement in the audience of all the world before God and his Angels and Saints what manner of men ought all to be in godly conversation This ought to move in every one a double care First that they avoyd carefully all ungodlinesse both in thought and action whereby they may suffer disgrace before God and all his creatures at the generall day of judgement when the booke of their conscience shall bee opened to every ones eye Secondly it doth perswade a diligence in all godly exercise and that all men contend with a holy emulation to exceede in godly actions whereby they may receive applause and generall reputation in the generall assembly of God and all creatures for as in earthly affaires men covet most desirously to gaine reputation and a generall good name There is no ambition lawfull but the covetous desire of heaven because it argueth an extraordinary degree of desert in him that hath
how to judge our selves which would prove much more terrible unto us the manner of this judgement is thus when the Spirit of God moves in any mans heart a desire to understand themselves the soule assembles the powers of his understanding and exerciseth the severall faculties in severall assignements and within himselfe by serious meditation can frame the order of a court the man body and soule hee is the prisoner at the barre hee is also both the witnesse and the judge the matter of his inditement is sinne his conscience is his accuser Conscience is our accuser his memory doth produce the witnesses his judgement doth pronounce the sentence and the divell attend the execution thus are the faculties of the soule disposed in judging of it selfe the soule against the soule producing the Law proving the forfeit and urging the penalty Now that which hath most busie care in this spirituall and most serious examination and judgement of our selves is the conscience by which the soule hath true intelligence and understanding in what condition it is 1 Cor. 11.31.32 and by whose authority the judgement of that spirituall Court is swayed the conscience giving testimony of all our actions good and evill whereby our judging part is directed without errour and to make a just proceeding without all parriality and therefore saith the wise man Eccles 14.2 Blessed is he that is not condemned in his owne conscience For if there be any just matter of condemnation against us there is no favour can bribe our conscience for that will to our selves accuse our selves of every sinne and reduce to memory many our sinnefull actions which but for our conscience we could not remember and therefore the Scribes and Pharises that brought the woman taken in adultery to Christ John 8.9 and demanded what judgement shee deserved were remembred and accused by their owne conscience of their owne guilt of sinne whereof they seemed to bee innocent or ignorant when ●s Christ said Let him that is without sinne Vers 7. cast the fi st sto●e at her so that they that were so busie in the c●●●demnation of another were condemned themselves by the testimony of their owne conscience their conscience making them apply their accusations to themselves which but then they had urged against anothe● And doubtlesse The spirituall power of the conscience it is a wonderfull degree of power the conscience hath in the spirituall triall of our soules in two respects First it knoweth all our sins both secret and open no man being able to hide them from the knowledge of his conscience Secondly it spareth no man neither any sin but without respect of any it urgeth all against all men yea the very sinnes of our thoughts are not privileged but are even in the knowledge and hatred of our conscience therefore saith Sai●t Paul Rom. 2.15 Their conscience bearing witnesse and their thoughts accusing or excusing one another and Almighty God when hee shall gather together all flesh to judgement and expose before the Saints and Angels the severall actions of every mans life whereby they may be judged accordingly either to mercy or justice He hath devised in his wisedome Our conscience shall reprove us in the day of judgement that every one should have a witnesse in himselfe which is their conscience the which in our life time doth register both our good and evill actions and at our judgement doth both witnesse and declare them and at that day the booke of every mans conscience is opened wherein is writ a true circumstance of every particular action of every mans life and these records these consciences are they that give evidence for and against our selves at the day of Gods generall judgement Rev. 20.12 c. And I saw the dead both great and small stand before God and the Bookes were opened that is all mens consciences wherein was writ the report of all their actions Thus wee may see what the office of our conscience is both in respect of our owne spirituall judgement which is our reformation and in respect of the generall judgement of God which must be to every one The manner of the accusation of conscience either eternall salvation or damnation Now the manner that conscience useth in this administration is worth our consideration that all men generally have a conscience the which God hath united inseparably to our reasonable natures And therefore not onely they that are of Christian beliefe and have the rules of Religion to teach them but men meerely naturall and ignorant of divine worship doe suffer the affliction of their wounded conscience which though it be in a farre inferiour degree of that of understanding Christians yet it doth in some proportion exercise a judgement on the soule and doth both remember and terrifie them that grossely offend against the Law of nature which to them is the Law of reason and Religion this is proved by the same place of Scripture before alledged that the Bookes of all the dead were opened Rev. 20.12 the word all excludes none from them the accusation of conscience all are then afflicted by conscience but not all alike effectually The Infidells that know not God The difference in the conscience of Christians and Infide●ls but onely as they are taught by the wisdome of nature their conscience doth but remember the offender his great sins only and that sparingly and with favour a Christian conscience is more severe for it remembers all men all their sins without favour without exception there is this difference also that of Infidels and wicked men doth often remember the offender his sin but afflicts him not A Christian conscience hath griefe neither provokes him to repentance but the conscience of Christians doth fearefully remember the sinner his sinne and doth wound the soule of the offender with sorrow and spirituall griefe making him pursue the meanes of his reformation and hate the cause for which his conscience doth so afflict him The difference of conscience among Christians this is the difference betwixt the conscience of a Christian and an infidell There is also great difference of conscience amongst Christians for as in the common sort that professe the Christian Religion the greater part is by much the worse and the choice particulars being the true worshippers of God are but few drawne out from an inf nite number of people so also though all that have a Christian name professe to have a Christian conscience The conscience of a Reprobate yet their conscience is no better then their Christianity onely a bare name whereof they have no spirituall use nor comfort Conscience in the Reprobate is either silent or outragious the silent conscience in the Reprobate is when custome and long continuance of sinning doth dull the sense of conscience Looke to your conscience what conscience yee have for conscience will damne and conscience will save and
spiration for as the Sonne receiveth the whole divine essence by generation so the holy Ghost receiveth it wholly by spiration Rom. 11.36 But because the Father created As Redemption Act. 20.28 and Sanctification and still governeth the world by the Sonne in the holy Ghost therefore these externall actions are indifferently in the Scripture often times ascribed to each of the three persons and therefore are called Communicable and divided actions 1 Pet. 1.23 so that when wee say that the divine essence is in the Father unbegotten in the Sonne begotten and in the holy Ghost proceeding we make not three essences but onely shew the divers manner of subsisting by which the same most simple eternall and unbegotten essence subsisteth in each person namely that it is not in the Father by generation that is in the Sonne communicated from the Father by generation and in the holy Ghost communicated from both the Father and the Sonne by proceeding These are incommunicable and doe make not an essentiall accidentall or rationall but a reall distinction betwixt the three persons And because the divine essence common to all the three persons is but one we call the same Unitie But because there be three distinct persons in this one indivisible essence we call the same Trinity So that this Unitie in Trinity and Trinity in Unitie is a holy Mysterie rather to be religiously adored by faith Iob 11.7 then curiously searched into by reason That God is one in Trinity 1. These things be manifest and must with a simple and cleare faith be believed that God is one in essence nature God-head will moving and working three in three persons of which every one hath severall subsistence and propertie which for all that be so in God that the Essence Nature God-head Majesty working will power honour and continuance for ever is common to them all all coessentiall all coeternall The Appellations of the persons for wee see that these three persons are called in holy Scriptures God the Word the Spirit but more plainly by Christ the Father the Sonne and the holy Spirit Matth. 28.19 We see that the faith of this holy Trinitie is not meant to be three Gods but three unsearchable subsistences or persons in one true God set forth to man for the better knowledge of Christ his only begotten Son and for the increase of his glory according to the measure of his revelation A Similitude For as two divers and sundry natures joyned together in one man doe not make two men but both doe still conserve the unitie of one person so that it remaineth still one man made of soule and body why then should it not sinke into our heads that three subsistences in one God neither in being neither in nature be divers but altogether equall and even doe not let but that the unitie of God remaineth still one A Similitude of the Sunne Who is so weake of judgement or so foolish of understanding to believe that there are three sunnes being indeed but one because there is three qualities or effects in the sunne First as it were a fountaine of light Note never ceasing Secondly the cleare shining brightnesse which commeth thereof Thirdly the heate breathing out and proceeding from them both The similitude of man who is so mad to determine or Imagine that a man hath three spirits because there are found three as it were divers substances the soule the minde and the will the soule whereby man liveth and moveth the minde whereby hee understandeth judgeth and discerneth the heart or will whereby hee willeth or willeth not hateth or loveth is sorry or glad becommeth good or evill these things are manifestly found in our selves wherby we may be led as by the hand to know the one and true God in this holy Trinity of Persons and in Trinity a perfect unity of God-head how may it bee rightly understood Iob 11.7 how the soule breedeth the minde and how the will commeth of them both By what way then can wee understand the divine birth of the Word of God and the proceeding of the holy Spirit thus in briefe I thought meete to note concerning this question what God is for the simpler sorts sake to the intent they may understand how farre forth the use thereof may doe them good that be desirous to apply their knowledge and understanding to God to the study of true godlinesse and not unto curiosity Iohn 1.1 2 c. And take this by the way that as the naturall sonne of man is naturally man so is the naturall Sonne of God naturally God and of one Essence with his Father but this knowledge of the holy Trinity was somewhat hidden till the revelation of the Word that tooke flesh When the holy Spirit began more especially to worke then this mystery of the Trinity in God was openly set forth by Christ when he said Goe teach all People Math. 28.19 The revelation of the holy Trinity baptising them in the Name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost and then conferred his grace upon them whereby the ministery of the holy Trinity began to be opened unto the world should bee a manifest witnesse to the people that whosoever should bee received into that grace should in the Sacrament of the first admission confesse themselves to bee sanctified in the name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost Thus farre of the divers manner of being in the divine essence Now of the Attributes thereof and first of the Nominall The Attributes of God are of two sorts either Nominall or Reall The Nominall attributes are of three sorts the first which signifie Gods Essence Secondly the Persons in the Essence Thirdly those which signifie his essentiall workes The first is named a Exod. 6.3 c. Exod. 15.3 c. Psal 83.18 Esay 48.11 Jehovah which signifieth Eternall being of himselfe in whom is being without all beginning all other beings both begin and end he is named Iehovah not onely in respect of being and causing all things to be but especially in respect of his gracious promises which without faile hee will fulfill in his appointed time and so causeth that to be which was not before Esay 55.7 Iohn 14.2 3. and upon our true repentance hee will assuredly pardon and forgive us all our sinnes at the time of death receive our soules and in the resurrection raise up our bodies in glory to life everlasting therefore this Name is a golden pledge unto us that because hee hath promised hee will surely performe unto us Exod. 3.14 Vers 13. The second Name denoting Gods Essence is Eheieh but once read and of the same roote that Iehovah is and signifieth I am that I am for when Moses asked God by what name hee should call him God then named himselfe Eheieh Ascher Eheieh I am that I am or I will be that I will
power distinguished in three persons the power is not divided every person in the Deity equall and in just comparison all of them but one God and every person God all of them conspiring the same ends from eternity to eternity this ought but is not the condition of men Princes and the great on earth Psal 82.6.7 are called gods these ought like God to combine themselves in holy action and to bend their power against the enemies of God and man sinne and the sinfull and not with implacable displeasure Such are merely politique respect greatnesse without goodnesse to destroy themselves and their estates with civill disagreements for though God say they are gods he saith they shall dye like men and if evill men they are then no gods but divells enemies to God enemies to the good and as in the nature of God mercy doth triumph and hath pre-eminence Mercy the best proof of goodnesse so in all the godly there should be a gracious pitty with which they ought to be most affected and God himselfe best pleased When I had thus considered the nature of God his Omnipotency his Mercy and other Attributes The cause is every mans duty it caused me to question my owne life and to search the records of my owne actions whereby I understood the truth of my miseries that I was guilty and deserved death and torments Mans desert as if the Justice of God had given sentence against mee then was the knowledge of Gods Majesty a terrour unto me I conceived in my feare the very forms of his indignation and I began to feele in my soule the very terrour of condemnation as if God had given sentence Mercy gives hope in greatest extremity and my soule in the sence of execution In this astonishment I remembred mercy and that God was so delighted in the use thereof as that he carefully watcheth cause and opportunity to give it Acknowledgment most necessary I did therefore acknowledge and submit my selfe to favour God did descend his greatnesse accepted my acknowledgement and gave me the allowance of his mercy then I reduced to memory what my Saviour had done for the Redemption of mankind The promises onely belong to the faithfull and penitent what he had promised the faithfull what the penitent I believed received strength and had my hope established and growing bold with these encouragements I desired and obtained the Sonne of God to restore me the Spirit of God to continue me restored reformed How to judge of good and evill then could my soule receive content in divine meditations then could I despise the profits of the earth and the vaine pleasures of men then could I justly value the honours of this life weigh them with vanity and esteeme them lighter then could I discerne vertue in poverty and holinesse in a contemptible degree of fortune The benefit of patience then I could see the patient beare their load with alacrity and secretly scorne at the base estimation of the earth Thus a reformed Judgement can teach to know and love know and hate let mee love and be beloved of God let me hate and be hated of the World These and many other things attributed to God in Scriptures teach us of what manner his Nature is that is to say good loving kind mercifull faithfull true upright just liking the humble and abhorring the proud The things of nature in God be everlasting slow to revenge wise and foreseeing and being so not by other helpe nor by chance but naturally and of himselfe it followeth that the like nature must for ever and unchangeably keepe in him which thing bringeth unto the faithfull an incredible comfort But in case we finde any other in him than this wee must understand that it is by some speciall sufferance and onely for a time and yet for all that the quality of his Nature in no point altered though some time he seemeth contrary to himselfe Psal 18. but that is to the ungodly perverse and to the destruction of them but the good and godly finde him alwaies such as his nature is The fire at Babylon seemed to have lost his nature A similitude when it saved harmelesse the three Children cast into the Oven but yet it used the strength of his nature toward them Dan. 3.20 c. which made the fire even so wee must thinke of God and alwaies marke what he doth by sufferance to punish the malice of the wicked and what also hee doth according to the quality of his Nature Rom. 11.33 O the deepenesse of the riches of the Wisdome and Knowledge of God how unsearchable are his Iudgements and his waies past finding out Of the Creation of the World THe Creation of the World hath beene the admiration of all men that knew not God nor believed Scripture Wisd 13. because their understanding was darkned wanting divine light they were not able to comprehend the knowledge of so high a secret Therefore the Philosophers have vainely and diversly disagreed in their severall constructions of the beginning of the World The vaine opinion of Philosophers some denying that the World ever had beginning but that it was derived by the power of nature from all eternity and eternall perpetuity to maintaine which absurdity they would demand how God made the world what instruments hee used in the building of so wonderfull a frame and withall holding that God could worke no otherwise then the order and meanes of secondary causes would beare and leade him unto But the truth is God is free in operation God is free in operation and not tied to any second cause or secondary meanes without which he can doe what he will and that which he doth by them and can alter and change them at his pleasure wherein may appeare their grosse mis-understanding of God his Nature that he like man If wee cannot conceive Gods wonderfull workes much lesse his unsearchable wisdome could not worke without the helpe of meanes and instruments Others more true more learned concluded that of necessity the World must have a beginning and that there was a Power Eternall which made moved and governed all things and the reason that the World was not eternall had this sufficient argument That the World did suffer detriment and decay in it selfe and the Elements had lost the purity of their nature which they had in the beginning the moving of the spheares and celestiall bodies which of all things in the World are most constant had endured some alteration so that nothing in the World All worldly things subject to alteration but did suffer a change which could not be if it were eternall This grounded reason did convince the common opinion of the Worlds eternity and did prevaile with them that could not be perswaded but by the power of reason This is not to perswade Christians but infidels and epicures
The judgment of reason that they who deny the judgement of Divinity may be judged by reason and the wisdome of nature which alone is able to convince all oppositions and gain-sayers but to Christians I will onely set forth what God saith for that may serve to informe and satisfie all and every faithfull Christian Gen. 1.1 c. Moses the servant and witnesse of God Almighty being inspired by the holy Ghost hath left recorded to all posterities the manner of the Creation of the World The scripture is onely able to satisfie all doubts to which authority not onely my selfe but every faithfull Christian doth confidently adhere utterly disclaiming all contradiction all diversity of opinion In the Creation is principally considered the Creator God and the creatures the workes of Gods Creation In the Creator is considered his power his purpose his power in being able by his word to finish such a worke of admiration his purpose The world was made for man and man for God not that hee needed any such thing that he had made to supply any defect in his Divinity but for the use of a creature man which afterward he was to make to whom hee gave the Heavens the earth and all the host of them for the service of man reserving onely man for the service of himselfe In the creatures is considered their originall or matter of their creation The matter of the creation for some things he made of nothing some of fire some of aire some of earth some of water some of flesh of nothing he created the Heaven the Earth and the Sea whereunto as is supposed may be joyned the heavenly Spirits but under correction of others of earth hee made and shaped the first man Adam our father also of the earth hee made beasts and all kind of plants and hearbs of the aire hee made wind and blasts The order God observed of the waters he created fish and foule of flesh he created Eve the first mother of our kind Next the order wherein they were created this originall was nothing for God created all things by the power of his Word without matter there being nothing whereof to make any thing the order observed in the creation was that God determined the World and the workes therein for the service of man would before he made man store the World mans mansion-house with very needfull providence that man at the very instant of his beginning might know himselfe to be in the fulnesse of Gods favour nothing wanting which might either administer to him profit pleasure or serve his necessity Againe in the creatures themselves God observed a speciall order First hee created light without which the workes of his greatnesse had not beene visible Secondly he created Heaven giving that priority Apoc. 4.11 Of the Celestiall bodies for the excellency and dignity of the place Next he made a separation of the Earth and Waters and gave the Earth a generation of all Plants and Trees bearing good seed Then hee placed in the Firmament the Planets and fixed the Starres and Celestiall bodies the which serve not onely for light to distinguish times and seasons but also by their influence for the generation and government of all living creatures Then God furnished the two elements of Water and Ayre with creatures of that kind Last of all hee stored the Earth with the creatures which live on that element and when hee had finished the creation of all things hee then made man after his owne similitude and gave him the possession of the World and the creatures hee had made giving him interest in all and power over all without exception of any This knowledge of the Creation is necessary in the understanding of every Christian of carefull conscience with which knowledge the lesse learned may satisfie themselves avoyding the curious search of such nice questions as may distract the simple and availe not unto salvation The knowledge of the power of God in creating the World doth admonish and remember all men that seeing God created all things by the power of his word The maine interest of all things is in God therefore the maine interest and principall claime to all things created remaineth to God only he being the absolute owner without competitor and how man hath onely the use and communication thereof and that onely with condition and limitation of time Note it doth also perswade a reverence to the Majesty of God and a feare of his displeasure for that God who is able by his Wod to create of nothing any thing is able also by his Word to destroy any thing and make it nothing or worse than nothing The purpose of the creation of the world by God being for the use and service of man doth remember all men that the measure of the love of God to mankind is infinite The infinite measure of Gods love who of his owne election did please to make a Creature of such noblenesse as to be called his Resemblance and Image giving him a soule of such divine nature as nothing but God can be more Every thing created is either for use or ornament for whose sake God made the world and stored it with the plenty of all things which migh● 〈◊〉 fit either for use or ornament all which God hath given man only requiring acknowledgement and thankfull service which condition if man performe God will then a thousand-fold double his favours and whereas these are but transitory and passible pleasures God will make them eternall and unexpressable both in number and worth John 1. for he that proveth a faithfull servant God will make him a sonne and crowne him with the glory of his Saints in the kingdome of glory where there is a perpetuity of all happinesse Againe the purpose of Gods creating the world for the use of man Man must use Gods Creatures with reverence and moderation doth admonish all men to use the Creatures of God with moderation reverence and Christian judgement not to despise them because they are Gods Creatures not to adore them because they are but Creatures but so to use them as they may supply that purpose for which God created them Thirdly seeing God created the world for mankinde in generall it doth remember us not to appropriate the Creatures of God to our owne private ends but to communicate the use of them with all such as shall need them for God gave not the world to Adam onely but to his posterity also therefore every man is lawfully interested in the enjoying of Gods Creatures Matth. 25. God gave the world to mankind in generall and not to any particular if by lawfull and allowable meanes hee can attaine them Againe if a Christian mans necessity require reliefe and favourable supportation hee hath a righteous claime to some part of the superfluous possessions of others and hee that shutteth up his compassion against such necessity
guard of Angels the Angels are as Gods saving hands which are moved to no worke without his divine direction The Angels rejoyce in heaven over a sinner that repenteth the teares of the penitent are as it were the wine of the Angels but an impenitent heart puts to flight the Angels our keepers let us therefore repent that wee may cause the Angels to rejoyce the Angels are of a heavenly and spirituall nature let us therefore thinke upon spirituall and heavenly things that they may remaine with us and take pleasure in our company The heele which is the extreme part of our body and the last terme of our life the wicked Serpent lyeth in wait for at the time of death therfore in that last agony of death the Angels guard is most necessary and needfull that they may deliver us from the firie darts of the divell and carry our soule when it is departed out of the prison of our body into the heavenly Paradise Luk. 1.11 12 13. When Zachary was in the Temple busie about his holy function the Angell of the Lord came unto him so if thou doe likewise delight in the exercise of the holy Word and Prayer thou mayst rejoyce to have the Angels thy protectors Thus wee may see by the testimony of Scriptures what the Angels are what their office and how they are affected of so gracious a disposition and so inclinable to the good of men Luk. 15.7.10 that they have consolation and joy in heaven among themselves at the conversion of a sinner ●oby 12.15 therefore in all respects of noblenesse and excellency they are the soveraigne of all Creatures whom God hath ordained to be continuall waiters in his holy presence and workers of his blessed Will and Pleasure It is by many doubted by some demanded Question whether men may not lawfully implore the favour and assistance of Angels it is dangerous to acknowledge Apoc. 22 8 9. lest thereby we take divinity from God and give it to his Angels they are therefore dangerously deceived who for giving the holy Angels demonstration of thankes give them adoration and divine worship and so coveting to please displease both God and his holy Angels that attend on them this is one extremity There is another and that is remissenesse when men acknowledge no reverence no respect to the dignity of holy Angels The holy men in all ages at the sight of an Angell Gen 18.2 3. would use extraordinary respect of humility and reverence as Abraham hee bowed himselfe to the ground in reverence of an Angell and called him Lord so likewise in the example of all the godly though in these times the Angels doe not present themselves as in the old world in visible formes therefore they neede no reverence yet they are often present in their spirituall natures which though wee cannot discerne them with our corporall eyes yet a spirituall judgement by holy contemplation may discerne them with the eye of faith for if there be a duty of reverence to men with whom wee converse doubtlesse there is a reverence also due to the holy Angels which doe converse and are conversant with us This Doctrine of the Creation the Nature the Power and the Office of Angells doth admonish and remember all men to make these and such like profitable uses to put us in remembrance of the mighty power of God and that in a double respect first being able by the power of his Word to create a Creature of such excellence and power of nature in nature excellent in number infinite Secondly being served and attended by these infinit number of powerfull creatures one whereof is able if God please to command to destroy the world and all the generations on earth God then being of such infinite power in himselfe in his servants the Angels it ought justly to move all men to a reverence of so great a Majesty and feare to provoke a power so able and infinite Againe the apostacy of those Angels that fell from their obedience and first state of happinesse doth admonish all men that seeing the Angels of such power of such excellence and so neere God in his favour and presence were tempted to fall from so great happinesse Let no man therefore be secure or presume in the confidence of his owne trust but daily beg and crave wholly to relie upon the mercy and providence of God without whom there is no safety no security the greatest power in the world being but weaknesse without the strength of his supportation For 2 Pet. 2.4 5.6 if God spared not the Angels that had sinned but cast them downe to hell and delivered them into chaines of darkenesse to be kept unto judgement neither spared he the old world Genes 7. but saved Noah the eight person a preacher of righteousnesse and his family Genes 19. and brought in the floud upon the world of the ungodly and turned the Cities of Sodome and Gomorah into ashes overthrew them and damned them and made them an ensample unto those that after them should live ungodly neither will he spare the transgression of men that of knowledge and purpose offend him for the Angels are farre exceeding greater then men both in power and might If God spared not the better hee will not spare the worse but cast them likewise into chaines of darknesse to bee kept unto the judgement of condemnation Againe though the Angels were of this excellency and dignity of nature and though many fell from their state of innocency as Adam afterward did yet the Redeemer of the world Christ Jesus Heb. 2.16 17 18 c. did not vouchsafe to take their nature and redeeme them but left them in the judgement of condemnation undertaking and finishing the worke of Redemption for man onely and not for Angels for as much as there was no recovery no turning no hope of salvation for these wicked and trayterous angels there was also no cause why their sinnes should bee set forth and declared as was the sinne of man Vers 15. which had not onely a punishment layd on him immediately but also a promise made for his reliefe and remedy in that respect the Apostle said that Christ tooke not upon him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham for he came not to save the angels that had falne but men yea rather to destroy the evill angels and their power and therefore they cry Mark 1.24 What have we to doe with thee Jesus of Nazareth art thou come before the time to destroy us and that they shall never bee saved it is plaine enough by the words of Christ Math. 25.41 Goe yee cursed to the everlasting fire which is prepared for the divell and his angels Therefore this ought to provoke all men to a zealous affection of love towards God who gave his onely beloved Sonne for the redemption of men preferring them in his love before the angels that had offended
nothing that might minister the fulnesse of content to his desire Man did degrade himselfe hee then suddenly by himselfe cast from these pleasures into a state most miserable depriving himselfe and posterity not onely of the pleasures but the usefull necessaries of this life Gods favour the highest benefit and that which is infinitely more worth than the rest the blessed favour and presence of God which of it selfe without addition is able to make the enjoyer most happy and absolute in his felicity Thus in a trice was man the glory of Gods workmanship by sinfull disobedience spoyled of his innocency A strange alteration which when hee lost and wanted his very nature endured alteration and hee that but lately was made Lord of all the world is now made subject to all extremities this one touch of sinne being of that infectious nature that like a leprosie A generall decay it spreads over all his whole nature his body his soule his workes nay his very affections are infected with this venome his holinesse his innocency and all his divine graces abandon his nature disdaining to consort with the fellowship of sinne God also who had made him and had so wonderfully inrich'd him with benefits takes off the majesty and ornaments he had given him and in stead thereof investing him with poverty and extremity of fortune What bitter effects sinne causeth Genes 3. and whereas before he had made him immortall hee now makes him subject to the stroke of death and in this array thus altered he excludes him his sacred presence This sinne branding not onely Adam with this disgrace and these deformities but himselfe and his posterity for ever being all disgraced from their innocency and also degraded from their excellency of nature now to describe Adams griefe in this alteration Anunutterable measure of griefe the power of mans invention is not able to doe it there are not words nay imagination hath not thought to conceive it for to fall from the happinesse of prosperity is a strange degree of griefe but to be deprived from that felicity is a torment which without extraordinary patience no man is able to beare In the fall and apostacy of man is principally to be considered these particulars First from whence he fell Secondly to what he fell From whence he fell was from the favour of God considered in the excellencie and innocency of mans nature in his large endowments of grace in his power and in his possession of pleasure in which respect Adam the first man was so aboundantly favoured as that his soule could desire no enlargement God having given him so many and so great demonstrations of his love and favour towards him as nothing could bee more this is abundantly proved before Secondly to what he fell Gen. 1.2 chapt this is familiarly knowne in the experience of every mans life being full of the marks of this misery as you may read in Ecclesiasticus a catalogue of mans misery Eccle. 40. what Adam was in his sinne and the miserable change hee endured by the alteration of his fortune The miseries of this life doth give us a particular knowledge of our owne condition Adam our father by generation was the father also of our corruption we his generation deriving our substance and nature from him have with him derived his sinne and punishment the which as they were inseparable in the nature of Adam at and after his fall so are they necessarily descended down upon us his posterity the trespasse being in him from whom we are all derived makes that we are all guilty of the sinne of Adam and are all deservers of the like punishment Rom. 5.12 c. this is St. Paul his judgement Wherefore as by one man sinne entred into the world and death by sinne so death went over all men for as much as all men have sinned As Adam was so are we 4. Esd 4.48 such a father such children the best way to understand our nature is to consider it in Adam but to understand his fall and the miseries thereof it is palpably evident in the knowledge of our own particulars the torments of our transitory life are sufficient arguments to perswade and resolve us thereunto for the extremities of fortune and her variable turnings remember all men the miserable conditions of sinnefull man Ier. 4 2. all men being at all times subject to all extremities and sometimes taste the bitternesse thereof in the booke of Ecclesiasticus as aforesaid there is a Catalogue of the miseries of mans life all which hapned to us for sin of Adam who by his sin not only did deprive himself of the inestimable worth of Gods favor but also brought the like condemnation upon his seed their posterity for ever by his one sin overthrowing the blessed estate of many millions of people as if at one blow he had cut off the heads of a world of people and doubtlesse but the sorrow for leesing the favour of God Adams sorrow Adam could not have a greater then this because there is nothing doth more move griefe and pity in gentle minds then a compassion of general calamities especially then when they are caused by their mis-fortune Ier. 2.3 that have the grace to pity them To undertake to ranke the calamities incident to sinnefull life were intricate N●te therefore we will omit the greater number and somewhat insist upon the greatest in the number that is the displeasure of God which is damnation a misery infinite in time infinite in torment a judgement denounced against all men for the sinne of one man because at the committing of sinne all men were then present in Adam and with him did both combine and conspire in the trespasse Adam then by his sinne did bring a generall destruction on his nature and thereby made himselfe and all men not onely subject to death but to an everlasting death and damnation to inflict eternall and unexpressable torments on the bodies on the soules of men It is not in the capacity and power of man to describe the torments of damnation for as they are infinite in time No man can describe at full the torments of damnation so also in number and greatnesse there is misery without hope torments without number without measure without end they are above our strength above our patience to beare them they are not utterable for number nor sufferable for torment the very soule though eternall is continually wasted with that affliction neither could it endure and last in such extremities but that God hath made it eternall Againe it is not onely infinite and eternally great in personall sufferings but also in griefe and spirituall discontentments and vexations the soule that is damned grievously afflicting it selfe with rage and intestine displeasure Discontent the sicknesse of the soule when it considereth from what dignity it is falne and the honour and felicity it
Angels Gal. 3.10 by the hand of a mediator not that the Angels did principally give the Law and appoint the covenant but that there service was to attend by the holy ministration Againe the Law was given by God by the hand of Moses in the presence of the Angels to give unto the Israelites because the Spirit of God had so sanctified Moses that hee was able to stand in the presence of God Exod. 20.18 19 the which the host of the Israelites could not doe but became astonished and exceedingly afraid at the voice of Gods thunders and therefore they desired Moses to negotiate betweene God and them they being not able to endure the presence of his Majesty Againe it was given by the hand of Moses because God would honour him above the rest of his brethren he having beene most industrious and constant in the service of God and therefore as God had by the hand of Moses given them deliverance out of Aegypt so by the hand of Moses hee would give them the covenants of his everlasting love Note and deliverance out of the bondage of sinne which grace was promised to all them that would live within the compasse of these lawes and is now given to all them that faithfully endeavour them though they faile in the maine performance therein Iohn 1.17 For the law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ Lastly the Law was given by name to the Israelites but in the purpose of God to all men all men being under the bondage of the Morall law of God the Law being able to judge and condemne all men Againe God gave it by name to the Israelites because they were then the choyce and select people of God for whom hee had done his wonders and to whom hee had promised a faire inheritance it also derived downe upon us and upon all posterities all men having entred into covenant with God to endeavour themselves in the faithfull keeping of his Commandements these circumstances are all necessarily considered in the maner of Gods delivering the Law From this may be generally observed that God in all his actions hath principall respect to holinesse and that no prophane circumstances assist him in his actions but as himselfe is most holy so his delight is in holy actions and hateth all prophanation both in matter and circumstance In the Law may generally bee observed an impossibility in the precise performance and keeping thereof no man being able An impossibility in the strict performance of the Law Acts 15.10 without favour to give a true account and to make an even reckoning with the Law the law being able to conclude us all under sinne it is an argument of Saint Peter now therefore why tempt ye God to lay a yoke that is the performance of the Law on the disciples neckes which neither our fathers nor we were able to beare Gal. 2.16 Saint Paul also to the Galatians concludeth an impossibility to be justified by the Law By the works of the Law no flesh shall be justified so that no man ought to repose his Justification in the Law Gal. 3.22 All men are judged by the Law yet every man ought to endeavour therein his utmost performance Secondly men are judged by the Law to be guilty and deservers of everlasting damnation This generall judgement of the Law against all flesh doth concl●de all men in the state of damnation no man being able to deliver himselfe from this judgement before the Law be fully satisfied which could not be done by other meanes then by the righteousnesse and death of Jesus Christ Gal 4.5 the Sonne of God and Redeemer of the World Seeing the severity of the Law of God Deut. 5 2. c. that no flesh can be saved by the workes of the Law therefore at the delivering of the Law when the Israelites promised Moses that they would doe whatsoever God should command them God seemes to expresse a passion of his love and to require lesse then the Law for the Law requireth a precise performance upon paine of damnation but God promised the blessing of his favour to all them that zealously endeavoured to keep the Law Vers 19. for howsoever no man can observe the ordinances of the Law Gal. 3.11 as thereby to be righteous and to deserve the promise yet did God accept the faithfull endeavours of men and supply their defects by the grace and operation of his holy Spirit Therefore God saith to Moses O that there were such an heart in them to feare me and to keepe my Commandements t●at it might goe well with them Deut. 5 29. and with their children for ever God is mercifull in his severest justice This doth prevent an objection which the wicked disobedient children might make against God and his Law seeing the Law of God doth require a greater duty then is in any mans performance and seeing that the Law doth condemne all them that faile in the least particular duty of the Law wherefore God might seeme to bee mercilesse in the severity of his justice God that made the Law is above the Law and their labour fruitlesse to attempt that which was unpossible both which are wickedly false for though the Law condemne every man yet God that made the Law is above the Law and d●th often grant his dispensation and pardon them whom his Law condemnes Secondly though no man can performe the Law yet all men may endeavour it the which endeavour being faithfull and industrious is accepted of Ood as if it were performance and this doth take from all men all matter of argument whereby they would excuse their disobedience He that endevours the Law hath the promise and neglect in their dutifull service to God for as is said though no man be able to doe the Law yet all men are able to endeavour it and this doth necessarily admonish all Christians in these times who presume over boldly on the liberty of faith that because Christ Jesus the Saviour of the world hath satisfied the justice of the Law Man must nor presume on the liberty of faith and wrought righteousnesse to all them that faithfully believe and apprehend his merits therefore they despise the workes of the Law holy and charitable exercises and repose themselves on the bare confidence of faith onely the which being altogether fruitlesse in the works of the Law A fruitlesse faith profiteth nothing is but presumption and vaine confidence and will dangerously deceive all them that affie therein for though Christ Jesus hath abolished the ceremoniall Law and satisfied the justice of the morall Law the which is availeable to all them that shall be heires of salvation yet his righteousnesse in observing the Law Christ hath not destroyed the Law but qualified it doth not destroy the substance of the Law and make it fruitlesse and uselesse but doth rather command our imitation
it so in contending for this spirituall garland Heaven it cannot but be an extraordinary degree of content and spirituall pleasure to be named in the ranke of best deservers And as malefactors that suffer publique punishment for their offence esteeme the shame more then the paine of their corrections so ought all men to feare the shame they must endure The booke of conscience cannot be defaced but onely by the precious blood of Christ when their conscience disgraceth them before so great a presence as will be at the generall day of judgement For let all men be perswaded that all their faults are so written in the booke of their conscience that there is no meanes to obscure their knowledge and to raze them out neither will the conscience though it bee our owne bee corrupted to connive and dissemble with God but even to our owne faces it will produce all our sinnes whose memory is not blotted out by the righteous blood of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God 1 Pet. 3.21 and seeing the witnesse of our conscience is the evidence whereby wee are all judged either to life or death wee all ought most carefully to avoyd the doing of ought that may offend our consciences Not to offend our conscience but rather to live in feare and awe of conscience because our eternall state dependeth upon the report and accusation of our owne conscience This ought to prevent all unconscionable actions in us and to move a dread in us to have a detestation of every sin because when we have committed sinnes wee have hired so many witnesses against our owne soules to urge our eternall condemnation The silent conscience will be most terrible and loud at the day of judgement Customary sinning duls the sence of conscience Lastly seeing that that conscience which in this life is most silent will notwithstanding at the day of judgement bee most terrible and clamorous it admonisheth all men not to rebell against their conscience and to runne on without checke in the committing of sinne but rather to yeeld themselves to the correction of their conscience left by their customary sinning they dull the sence of conscience and so runne on the race of all unlawfulnesse for though the reproofe of conscience bee very terrible to him that rightly understands it yet ought it to bee carefully apprehended and respected as a moving cause to reformation and repentance and let no man incourage himselfe with common example that because the common sway of mens actions respect greatnesse more then goodnesse and craft more then conscience that this can warrant any ones imitation but rather wheresoever we see unconscionable dealing if in our friends wee ought to admonish them and tell them of their fault if in our enemies we must hate the sin but pity the sinner and labour if it be possible The office of charity his conversion but not his imitation and this direction is both wisedome and charity for he that is wise shall be armed and not harmed by ill example and he that is charitable will doe all the good he can and wish the good he cannot doe Let us therefore constantly endeavour to reduce to memory the severall actions of our life past let us then compare them to the duty of our conscience Good conscience is in hatred with sin and thereby understand in what degree of sinne we are what our conscience shall approve let us continue what it condemneth let us hate be it our pleasure be it our profit be it our neerest or our dearest sin if our conscience call it sin let us despise it let there be nothing shall make us alter or suspend this resolution let us be constant in the love of conscience what we have done amisse let us reforme it by conscience what we have to doe let our conscience judge it lawfull before wee doe it if our conscience presents us profit let us despise it if it be not honest if pleasure and not lawfull let us loath it let us undertake no action nor entertaine no favour but by the direction of conscience in every judgement and in all our actions To consult with conscience let us consult and be led by the rule and voyce of conscience if the world commend a sin and our conscience condemne it let us condemne the world and commend our conscience let us credit our conscience more then common example because our conscience must judge us and not example if our conscience accuseth us secretly of sin wee shall certainly know there is cause let us not silence our conscience from all reproofe let us only avoid the cause of reproofe sin and that carefully when our conscience shall urge us the Law our sins and the condemnation of the Law we have deserved let us not despise our conscience nor despaire mercy but direct our hearts and our eyes of faith to Jesus Christ the strength of our salvation Rom. 5.1 by whose favour wee shall both satisfie the Law and our conscience the hope and comfort we have in his righteousnesse will quiet the trouble of our conscience and hee that hath reconciled God and us will also reconcile us to our conscience Conscience that did accuse will comfort and make it that was our accuser our comforter This direction I propose to my selfe and doe perswade all men as I propose and purpose that in all our actions and consultations we judge nothing convenient that is not lawfull and nothing may be thought lawfull but that which hath the warrant of a good conscience To avoid Security COnsider thou devout soule what a matter it is to be saved and thou shalt easily shake off all security at no time and in no place is there security neither in Heaven nor in Paradise much lesse in the world Genes 3.17 An Angell fell in the presence of the divinity and Adam fell in the place of pleasure Adam was created after the Image of God and notwithstanding hee was deceived by the trecheries of the divell Solomon was the wisest of men 1 King 3.12 and 11.3 and yet his wives turned away his heart from the Lord. Judas was in the Schoole of our Saviour and did every day heare the saving Word of that chiefe Doctor Luk. 22.3 and yet was hee not safe from the snares of Satan hee was plunged headlong into the pit of covetousnesse and desperation and so into the pit of perpetuall punishment David was a man according to Gods owne heart 1 Sam. 13.14 and was unto the Lord a most deare sonne and by murther and adultery 2 Sam. 12.6 7. hee became the sonne of death Where then and when is there security in this life Relie with an assured confidence of heart upon the promises of God and thou shalt be safe from the invasions of the divell There is no security in this life but in the life to come there is no securi●● in this life but
that which is infallibly promised in Scripture to those that believe and walke in the 〈◊〉 of the Lord but when we come unto the future happinesse promised unto us then shall wee have full security for in this life Religion and feare are coupled together neither can the one be without the other therefore thinke upon the grievous spots of thy sins and feare him that according to justice will judge thee for the same What are the afflictions of the godly but bitter arrowes sent from the sweet hand of God for their correction many that escape unpunished in this life God thinkes them unworthy of punishment whom notwithstanding he reprobateth for ever Outward felicity is often times a signe of eternall damnation nothing is more unhappy than the happinesse of sinners and nothing more miserable then hee that knowes no misery Augustin Whatsoever thou beholdest with thine eyes thou seest cause of griefe which duly considered are remedies against security Behold God above whom we have offended thinke upon hell beneath which we have deserved thinke upon the sin behinde the which wee have committed thinke upon the judgement before which wee dread and stand in feare of thinke upon the conscience within the which wee have defiled and thinke upon the world without which wee have too much loved consider whence thou camest and be ashamed consider what thou art and be sorrowfull consider whither thou goest and tremble Let a man therefore lament and grieve and shake off all security lest in the just and secret judgement of God hee be forsaken and left in the power of the divell to be destroyed if thou hast grace so delight thy selfe in it and acknowledge it to be the gift of God and that thou dost not possesse it by any hereditary righteousnesse of thine owne Security is a pernicious sin Happy shalt thou be if thou labourest with all care and diligence to avoid security the mother of all evill God will not forsake thee but take heed thou dost not forsake him God hath given thee his grace pray thou earnestly unto him that he would also give thee perseverance in that grace God bids thee be certaine of thy salvation but he bids thee not be secure therefore thou must fight valiantly 2 Tim. 4.7 8. that thou maist at length triumph gloriously thy flesh within thee fighteth against thee and the enemy the neerer he is the more to be feared the world about thee fighteth against thee and the greater the enemy is the more to be feared the divell about thee fighteth against thee and the more potent the enemy is the more to be feared through the power of God feare not to encounter with these enemies through the power divine thou shalt be enabled to obtaine the victory but thou canst not overcome these so great and potent enemies by security but by assiduity in fighting then doe the enemies most gather their forces together when they seeme to grant truce they are vigilant and watchfull and thou sleepy and sluggish they make themselves ready to assault and hurt thee make thou thy selfe ready therefore to resist Many faint by the way and never come home into their countrey Deut. 1.35 how many Israelites did there die in the wildernesse and never came to the promised Land of Canaan how many spirituall sonnes of Abraham doe perish in the wildernesse of this world and never come to enjoy the promised inheritance of the Celestiall Canaan Let it be therefore our onely desire to attaine to the glory which is in heaven wee live in security as we were past the snare of death and the day of Judgement Matth. 24.44 Christ saith he will come to judgement at such an houre that wee thinke not of this saith Truth it selfe And againe he repeats it heare and feare for the Lord will come at an houre wee thinke ●o of Wee have therefore great cause to feare that we come not to judgement unprovided for how shall we be able to endure the strict examination at the day of judgement Seeing we cannot recover for ever that which is lost in this one moment in the shortnesse of this one moment judgement shall passe either to mercy or condemnation what we shall be for all eternity in this one moment life and death damnation and salvation punishment and eternall glory shall be appointed to every one Lord thou that hast given us grace to that which is good give us also grace to persevere in that goodnesse least wee fall into the ensuing danger prepared for the reprobates and the ungodly which is hell and damnation and the torments thereof Of the knowledge of mans corruption and state of his misery in this world and the miserable state and condition in the life to come without we be renovated by Christ which Lord God grant us all grace so to be O Wretched man where shall I begin to describe thy endlesse miseries who art condemnable as soone as conceived lyable to eternall death before thou wast born to a temporall life A miserable change hapned to all posterities by the fall of Adam A beginning indeed I finde but no end of thy miseries for when Adam and Eve being created after Gods owne Image and placed in paradise that they and their posterity might live in happy and blessed estate of life immortall having dominion and rule of all earthly creatures and onely restrained from the fruit of one tree as a signe of their obedient subjection to their Almighty Creator though God forbad them this one small thing under the penalty of eternall death yet they believed the divels word before the Word of God making God as much as in them lay a lyar and so being unthankefull for all his benefits which God bestowed upon them they became male-content with their present state as if God had dealt enviously or niggardly with them and believed that the divell would make them partakers of farre more glorious things then ever God had bestowed upon them and in their pride they fell into rebellion and committed high treason against the most high Almighty and disdaining to be Gods subjects they affected most blasphemously to be gods themselves equall unto God their maker hence till they repented loosing Gods Image they became like unto the Divell and so all their posterity like a traiterous brood whilst they remained impenitent like them Math. 13.42 are subject in this life to all cursed miseries and in the life to come to everlasting fire and damnation prepared for the divell and his angels Consider therefore thou faithfull soule the miserable condition of man and thou shalt easily avoyd all temptations man is vile in his ingresse miserable in his progresse and lamentable in his egresse he is assaulted by divels provoked by tentations allured by delights cast down by tribulations entangled by accusations bestripped of vertues snared in all evill customes and drowned in all manner of vices Lay aside then for a while thy
thereof to gaine this honour and for to gaine this honour let us spend our houres spend our actions and our endeavours nay let us spend our honours and all to make this purchase let us run our spirituall course with alacrity seeing this honour is proposed us when we have it let us esteeme it precious it was given by grace it cannot be redeemed by nature let us esteeme it as it is worthy and having once obtained the honour to be the childe of grace nay the childe of God let us carry that honourable title to our grave and with that wee will present our selves in the day of judgement before God our honourable Father and before the honourable company of Angels and Saints and then it will appeare by direct evidence before all the world whether our honour in being the childe of God regenerate and made the sonne of God which the world despised Jerem 4.2 or their transitory honour and prosperity of fortune wherein they gloried and proudly exalted themselves be of better proofe worth or esteeme when God shall call us his sonnes and bid us enter the Kingome of our joy and call them reprobates and bid them enter their prison bonds Matth. 25.46 John 5.29 and paines perpetuall this will be the blessed priviledge our honour will then give unto us therefore to be regenerate thereby to have God our Father and our friend let us not care what neglect what scorne and what disgraces the world cast upon us for as those will vanish with time yet so will our honour be as God our Father is infinite in joy infinite in worth infinite in time let us therefore infinitely esteeme of it and by all meanes strive to attaine it Amen Of Sanctification SEeing that hee which is regenerate is also sanctified and made holy but it is not derived to us from our parents Ephes 2.10 But Almighty God is the fountaine and proper efficient cause of our sanctification and holinesse whose worke-manship wee are created in Christ Jesus unto good workes Colos 1.13 who in mercy hath translated us out of the kingdome of darkenesse and hath delivered us from the power of the Divell and made us fit for the Kingdome of his beloved Sonne Ephes 2.4 5. in whom hee hath quickened us through his love and riches of his mercy together with Christ even when wee were dead in sins him hath God lifted up with his right hand Acts 5.31 to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance unto his chosen Hebr. 2.4 and forgivenesse of sinnes and albeit our sanctification be the worke of the whole Trinity yet it is immediately performed by the holy Ghost because hee doth set us on fire and inflame us with a zeale of Gods glory with a care of our duty and with a love of all men Sanctification is the very translation and alteration of the heart and life of man or a spirituall reduction and conversion of a man from his wickednesse unto God and from the uncleannesse of sin to true purity and Christian sanctity The persons sanctified are such as are elected Rom. 8.30 called and justified therefore the Apostle saith that whom God predestinated called and justified them also he glorified these are truly sanctified whom he maketh to be the temples of his Spirit Sanctification of the body is that whereby the members thereof are made fit instruments for the soule regenerated to worke the workes of God with it being become obedient to the minde illumined 1 Cor. 6.19 and the heart reformed through the worke of the Spirit who now hath made it the temple of his holinesse whereas before it was a slave to the flesh and a shop of uncleanenesse and iniquity Ephes 2.8 It is a most gracious and free worke of the Lord without all obligation or merite of ours for the Spirit of God bloweth with the blasts of his grace both when how where and on whom he lifteth and the Apostle teacheth us Verse 4 5. that wee are quickened together with Christ through whose great love and grace wee are saved this is the vertue of Christs resurrection by the power of his God-head raising up his man-hood and releasing him of the punishment and tyranny of our sins by which vertue and power wee are quickened and restored that wee might live unto God in holinesse and newnesse of life Note Now the sanctification of the soule consists in the alteration of the mind the renovation of the will Note the sanctification of the memory and the regeneration of the conscience in the alteration of the mind whereby ignorance is by little and little abolished and the mind enlightened to know the true God and his mercy in Christ and to know and understand a mans selfe and his secret corruptions against the Law of God and to know how to behave himselfe towards God and man as also to prove the things of God and to mind and meditate on things spirituall and celestiall The renovation of the will is when God gives a man grace truely to will good as to believe honour feare and obey God the sanctification of the memory is an aptnesse by grace to keepe and to bee mindfull of good things especially of the doctrine of our salvation and such like the regeneration of the conscience is when it is fitted to give true testimony to a mans heart of the remission of his sinnes and of the carefulnesse of his care to serve God and to doe other good duties concerning our Christian brethren it consists also in the spirituall transformation of the affections as joy love sadnesse feare anger and such like whereby a man that is justified doth so temper them by his reason refined and by the light of the Law with the helpe of the holy Spirit that they do not break out as in the wicked that give the reines to their lusts but are held in some good order howbeit in this life this is not done without much strife and reluctation of the flesh and Spirit and is rather affected then effected Here we must observe that sanctification doth not alter the substance of man but onely his corrupt and sinfull qualities it rectifieth affections but abolisheth them not it corrects and moderates mirth sorrow anger and such humane passions but takes them not quite away it tunes the jarring strings of a mans heart but breakes them not in peeces As the fall of man did not abolish a mans essence but corrupt his faculties even so the raising up and renovation of man doth not alter his very substance but doth onely change his corrupted qualities and powers this visible reformation of a man is when hee dedicates himselfe unto God and good duties to his neighbours whose sinnes bee abandoned which before raigned in his heart This worke of the Spirit is wrought in the whole man but it belongs chiefely to the faithfull and elect of God for civill moralities and
Justification to be in the workes of the Law and doth absolutely ascribe it to the power of faith in Christ and he giveth a reason of this doctrine for saith hee If righteousnesse be by the Law Gal. 2.21 then Christ dyed without cause So then the very cause why Christ died was that righteousnesse might be imputed and apprehended by faith to all them that believe seeing that by workes it is impossible and therefore saith the Prophet David Psal 32.1 Blessed is he whose unrighteousnesse is forgiven Verse 2. and whose sinnes are covered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne so hee thinketh them most righteous that have their unrighteousnesse forgiven them and them most holy that have not their sins imputed unto them Rom. 4. The fourth to the Romanes the whole Chapter is an earnest and sufficient proofe of this argument and doctrine where the Apostle laboureth by direct evidence to satisfie all doubt as if hee had fore-knowne the stiffe and unreconcileable oppositions of these times against this doctrine of Justification in which Chapter he maketh Abraham his instance in whom there was as much cause of boasting and as much righteousnesse as in any other particular save Christ Jesus onely yet he there proveth that Abraham upon whom God had founded his peculiar people was not justified by the righteousnesse of his workes but that this faith was imputed unto him for righteousnesse and for proofe alleadgeth Scripture Gen. 15.6 And Abraham believed the Lord and hee accounted that to him for righteousnesse so that the matter of our justification is the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ onely and the meanes of apprehending it is onely by faith This doctrine howsoever it is made strong and unresistable by many testimonies of holy Scripture and though it be zealously maintained by men of great learning and religious judgement yet it hath endured violence and suffered disgrace both by ignorance and envie this age maintaining such oppositions of error as the ignorance of former times first occasioned therefor● at this day this argument of justification is one of the maine controversies of the world the one maintaine justification by faith onely the other by workes that defending truth this opposing it and though a faithfull man would be willing to quarrell in defence of faith Note Psal 91.4 faith being our shield of defence against all gaine-sayers sin and the dwell yet know not how to give addition of strength to them that have already exceedingly travelled in this manifest truth and whose faithfull paines have maintained this quarrell with valour and victory against all opposition neither is it in the purpose of this businesse to dispute questions of truth but to deliver truth as it is by admonitions and plaine teachings to men of simple easie understanding for whose Christian good these paines are principally taken whose simplicity might most easily be confounded in the intricate search of cunning arguments for these respects And because all contention and strife of words is in the hatred of my nature I will as I finde it written downe sparingly deliver my selfe in a large argument and strike onely one blow at the enemy of faith that I may bee knowne to be an enemy of that enemy and that by a familiar proofe I may instruct the knowledge of them that are lesse learned For they that deny justification by fayth and approve it by works would frame this argument from the testimony of Saint James Jam. 2.17 c. who speaking of a generall faith doth utterly disable it from the office of justification and therefore he saith that Faith without workes is dead in it selfe for as the body without the spirit is dead even so faith without workes is dead also Therefore say they that the Apostle concludeth that of workes a man is justified and not of faith onely To this is answered it is most true that fruitlesse faith is dead neyther can justifie and that good workes are the spirit and soule of a living faith for as the body without the soule is not a living man but a dead carcase so faith without workes is not living is not saving nay is not true faith but onely beares a generall name and with Saint Iames wee may conclude against all such faith But if there be a faith that hath a necessity depending of good workes as necessarily as the soule to the body and the fruit to the tree and that this faith declare it selfe to bee plentifull in good actions the fruits of a living faith we may then with Saint James conclude against them for hee doth not as they doe disinable all faith in the worke of justification but onely that faith which is dead Note and without workes So both opinions imply a necessity of workes the one as the cause of justification and the other as an effect in them justified It were easie to be large in numbring authorities and in reporting such distinctions and shifts as the deceived use in supporting their erroneous opinions they are but inventions therefore without respect wee will passe them over Note but advise the Christian Reader to beware of both extreames and modestly and moderately to understand the meanes of his justification that his zeale carry him to no extremity but to the vertuous meane onely and not to ascribe all to fayth and nought to workes but to give them both their necessary respects for as wee are not justified but by fayth so our fayth is not justified but by our workes for if our works be not faythfull our fayth working we are not justified neyther can be saved For when it is said that fayth onely justifieth it is meant and not denyed that charity is joyned with that fayth which justifieth being inseparably united unto it but that onely fayth and not charity is the meanes by which we embrace Jesus Christ our justification righteousnesse As for example the fire hath heate and light which qualities cannot bee severed in that subject Note yet the fire burneth by heate only and not by light now if they will reason say if the heate of the fire only burn Similitude then it burneth without the light of the fire but that it cannot do such is their reason against justification only because it cannot be separated from charity Likewise though the parts of mans body bee joyned together and one is not without another in a perfect body yet the eye onely sees and the eare onely heares and every part hath his distinct office and so hath faith and charity Thus may the seeming difference betweene Saint Paul and Saint Iames bee reconciled Heb. 11. but such fayth and workes as Saint Paul meaneth justifie us before God but such fayth and workes as Saint Iames meaneth justifie us before men but God doth justifie effectually fayth doth justifie apprehendingly and good workes doe justifie declaringly that is we doe declare our selves by our workes
immediately from him or by some meane are bestowed in a certaine measure for no man in all points hath granted unto him such a perfection of any gift but that hee may be made more perfect in the same gift for whosoever is wife is so wise in measure that he may yet be made wiser in that of that sort is the gift of faith and all other the gifts of God granted unto men this the Apostle witnesseth saying that no man esteeme of himselfe more then he ought Rom. 12. but so esteeme himselfe that he behave himselfe discreetly according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith Againe the Apostle saith that there is given to some a greater to some a lesser measure of faith Ephes 4. yet there is one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God one selfesame but not all one measure one Father of all which is above and through all and in you all Wherefore the faithfull be not alike in those things which doe grow upon faith and doe follow the same as in knowledge in love and feare of God also in hope love to our neighbours patience and study of godly life Againe Measure of faith sufficient to salvation 1 Cor. 12. the measure of faith is so divided by the providence of God that to the elect there is no lesse given him then is sufficient to salvation For he giveth a sufficient proportion to every one for he that hath the greater hath never a whit the greater salvation nor hee which hath the lesse hath never the lesse salvation the truth thereof is set forth in Exodus and they gathered Manna some more Exod. 16 17 18. some lesse and unto him that gathered much remained nothing over and unto him that had gathered little there was no lacke True faith whereof wee doe speake is not given unto all men therefore it is that the Apostle saith 2 Thes 1. Rom. 10.16 Esay 65.12 all men have not faith all men doe not believe the Gospel for Esaias saith Lord who hath believed our sayings To obey the Gospel is to assent unto it with true faith and to repose our selves in it with a good and assured trust therefore the true faith of Christ is not in all men that is to say it is none of those common gifts of God which are commonly given unto all men but it is one of the speciall graces which are onely given unto some few by the providence of God of this kinde be also the heavenly and spirituall gifts which be necessary unto true and everlasting felicity such as faith hope charity patience the study of godlinesse and the feare of the Lord and the like No doubt this gift of faith is a singular gift of God but it is not enough for a man to have it When it is once gotten it must be nourished when we have it unlesse that after hee hath it it be continually conserved increased and practised throughout all our life for faith is of the same nature that the vertues be which be naturally powred into us and be necessary for the conservation of this present life which it is not sufficient to have received them unlesse they be also furthered amplified and encreased in us as for example the power of reason which wee received at the first birth of our flesh which must alwaies be nourished advanced and exercised to the necessary uses of our life Note So this Christian faith which is as it were a certaine reason of our second birth and new man in Christ must like an infant be fed and furthered to the spirituall life the increase of faith is when it groweth and increaseth in the hearts of the faithfull whereby it waxeth stronger and stronger by the grace of God that we be now able to believe those things which before wee could not believe although they were never so true and set forth in the Word of God that Christ is the Saviour of the world 2 Thes 1. The Thessalonians increased in faith abundantly this increase of faith doth depend upon the increase of the knowledge of Christ so the faithfull be admonished of Saint Peter that they should increase in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 3. the increase of faith may be perceived in the mutuall love towards our brethren in their patience and suffering of troubles So the Apostle meant when he said For as much as your faith increaseth 2 Thes 1. and the charity of every of you one towards another aboundeth so that wee our selves doe glory of you in the Church of God for your patience and faith in all your persecutions and tribulations which you doe suffer on the other side staggering and carefull feare doth argue a weaknesse of faith so it was said to Saint Peter Why doubtest thou O thou of little faith Mat. 14.30 31. and they which doe start backe in the time of temptation persecution affliction or tribulation are tryed to be weake in faith and doe prove themselves so to be so the faith of St. Peter was weake Mat. 26.71 72. when he was proved by the maydens word and denyed his Master And seeing that there is given to all the elect of God a measure of faith from the Lord and that the same is not all one in all men and yet sufficient for every one unto salvation and is such that it is not perfected in any certaine space of time or yeeres but that wee must travell in it and endeavour it as long as wee live in this world as soone as faith is conceived by the gift of God Faith breedeth true repentance it produceth and bringeth forth as her daughter true repentance and that so soone that it seemeth to bring it with her from heaven as her waiting mayd whereof there be many examples in the holy Scriptures Zach●us as soone as hee was come to the faith of Christ said Luk. 19.8 Lo Lord I doe give the one halfe of my goods to the poore and in case I have beguiled any body I doe restore foure times as much which words doe manifestly declare the judgement of true repentance and when a great sort of people began to believe the saying of St. Peter Acts 2.37 they had remorse in their hearts and brast out saying What shall wee doe brethren to be saved and many of them that began to believe came to the Apostles and disclosed their doings moved no doubt by the spirit of repentance The true knowledge of God Faith doth take hold of the true knowledge of God and of Jesus Christ his Sonne which the world here cannot attaine unto The holy Spirit doth kindle a light in the hearts of the faithfull so that they may most certainly know those things to be most true which they doe believe in faith so Saint Peter said to whom shall wee goe Joh. 6.68 69. thou hast the words of
bee heard must pray heartily with all his heart with all his soule with all his strength Deut. 6.5 Thrice hee requireth all least wee should keepe a thought behind and God saith My sonne give me thy heart Pro. 23.26 that is which Christ calles spirit and truth without hypocrisie for untill wee doe give our hearts unto God our hearts are vaine barren and sinnefull and then it is the Spouse of Christ the Temple of the holy Ghost and the Image of GOD so changed reformed and refined that God calles it a new heart so that when the heart sets forward to prayer and is willing to serve God then all the members will follow after and yeeld consent the tongue will praise him the foote will follow him the eare will attend him the eye will watch him and the hands will serve him nothing will stay behind if the heart pricketh them forward such motion hath the heart that it maketh all the rest of the sences pliant nimble and currant about it and yeeld consent unto the heart Therefore it is almost as easie to speake well and doe well as to thinke well for if the heart indite a good matter no marvell though the tongue bee the Pen of a ready writer Psal 45.2 Heb. 3.12 but if the heart be dull all the sences are out of tune like a left hand they are unapt and untoward to any good the tongue will not praise because the heart doth not love the eare will not heare because the heart doth not mind the hand will not give because the heart doth not pitty the foot will not goe because the heart willeth not to stirre all depend and stay upon the heart Therefore the Lord requireth the heart which is the first motion to all goodnesse in man if the heart be perfect all is good for our heart gives consent to all our actions when wee speake wee should speake as if our heart did speake pray as if our heart did pray heare as if our heart did heare give as if our heart did give remit as if our heart did remit and counsell as if our heart did counsell as the Apostle saith Cor. 3.23 Doe all things heartily as unto the Lord and not as done unto men for there is nothing troublesome unto our conscience but that which goeth against the heart wee should therefore serve God with all our hearts for his honour and for his Names sake and not for our owne respects and our owne ends for he which giveth his heart unto God doth all things for the love of God and to his glory As Ioseph charged his brethren Gen. 42.15 c. that they should not come to him for more Corne unlesse they brought their brother Beniamin unto him whom they left behind at home so God will not have us to pray and seeke unto him for any thing Math. 15.8 unlesse wee bring our hearts unto him which oftentimes we leave behind the tongue that prayeth without the heart is a flattering tongue the eye without the heart be godly is a wicked eye the eare without the heart is a vaine eare the hand without the heart bee right is a false hand Dost thou thinke that God will accept a flattering tongue a wicked eye a vaine eare a false hand without the sacrifice of thy heart Saint Paul saith If I give all that I have and speake with the tongues of men and of Angels and have not love that is give not my heart 1 Cor. 13.1 c. it availeth nothing Therefore who so feareth the Lord it shall goe well with him at the last and in the day of his death hee shall be blessed the heart is the Temple of God and he that giveth it to any thing but to God committeth sacriledge and breaketh that Commandement Give unto God those things which are Gods that is Math. 22.21 an upright heart with due honour and worship Wherefore when you pray let your heart pray when you heare let your heart heare when you give let your heart give whatsoever you doe set the heart to doe it and let your godly heart guide you in all your actions if it be not so perfect as it should be yet God will accept it for his sake that gives it redeemed it to whom let us by faithfull and earnest prayer commit our hearts our soules our bodies and all that ever wee have unto his most gracious and mercifull protection and tuition Of Afflictions 2 Cor. 1.5 6 7. FOr as much as it is almost unpossible for the innocent and faithfull soule to attaine to the end of her progresse Acts 14.22 the heavenly Canaan but that shee must passe through the troubles crosses and miseries of this wicked and wretched world and whiles wee doe live in the flesh we be subject to all kind of afflictions by the speciall providence and purpose of God both thorough the weaknesse of our nature and also through the malice of this present world especially the poore the needy distressed and godly disposed persons Therefore it behoveth all men how to understand and undertake to beare and overcome the adversities which through the malice of the world and our owne infirmities cannot be avoyded yet there is nothing so troublesome and sorrowfull which the patient man and well disposed Christian is not able to overcome by the grace of his Saviour that strengtheneth him 1 Cor. 10.13 For the Apostle saith there hath no temptation taken you but such as followeth the nature of man but God is faithfull which shall not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able to beare but shall with the temptation make a way to escape indeed our whole nature is generally corrupt weake and feeble There be a passing number of the sorts of afflictions and the corruption thereof doth customeably breed certaine peculiar griefes to every age who can account the griefes of the flesh which cold heat and hunger thirst diseases and severall dangers doe enforce upon every age and condition but most generally afflictions doe chance unto men as base in condition and low in degree as contempt oppression pillage and poverty with all manner of wrongs and injuries whereby the meaner sort be without respect troden downe by the greater and stronger and be devoured in this world even as the smaller fishes be in the Sea by the greater and the mightier whereof Habakkuk doth complaine saying O Lord how long shall I cry and thou wilt not heare mee I call unto thee whilest I suffer and thou wilt not save mee Habak 1. why dost thou shew mee wickednesse and trouble to see spoyling and violence before my face and they doe raise up strife and contention the Law is dissolved and judgement hath no execution Psal 82.2 3 4. for the wicked doth compasse about the righteous and wrong judgement proceedeth This manner of afflictions wherewith the poore and the widowes the fatherlesse desolate
strangers Job 30.25 and the innocents are oppressed in this world without care and conscience Eccles 8.11 and doe reigne without regard or looking to the poore lieth oppressed in every corner without reliefe or redresse of their wants or wrongs Psal 69 21 22 the Apostle maketh mention of many other afflictions as tribulation anguish perill persecution hunger Rom. 8.35 nakednesse Verse 18. 2 Cor. 4.17 all which shall not separate us from the love of God for saith he I am certainly perswaded that the afflictions of this world are not worthy of the glory which shall be shewed upon us in the life to come the occasions of these evills wherewith we be afflicted doth proceed of our selves By the providence of God Psal 89. because of our sins therefore the Prophet saith I wil visit their wickednesse with the rod and their sinnes with stripes neverthelesse my loving kindnesse will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my truth to faile as the Lord said to him that was sicke of the palsie Matth. 9.2 Be of good cheere my sonne thy sins be forgiven thee Againe hee said to him that had beene diseased thirty eight yeeres Joh. 5.5.14 Lo thou art made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing happen unto thee Every man must be fully perswaded Afflictions be sent from God that troubles crosses losses and all manner of afflictions doth come and fall upon us by the disposition and ordinance of God and no otherwise this is confirmed by the testimony of God himselfe Esay 45.5 saying I am the Lord and without we there is no God it is I that created light and darkenesse it is I make peace and trouble yea Verse 7. even I the Lord doe all these things whereby we doe perceive that wee be scourged of God for our sins and iniquities and by them wee doe provoke the wrath of God upon us besides there be some sins that of nature A covetous minde is never satisfied nor thinkes any thing unlawfull they doe afflict both our bodies and soules as drunkennesse doth trouble and marre mens bodies and minds and covetousnesse and envie the mind and soule one saith that every disordered affection is a punishment to it selfe There be also many afflictions wherewith the godly just and innocent be oppressed by the wicked in this world by their ungodlinesse malice anger hatred enmity envie pride and delight in strife and variance in which they doe hate and trouble them without desert Iob 37.23 it is not the property of God to afflict but to deliver and save the afflicted for hee is good gentle milde and loving towards man-kind so that he delighteth in doing good to them according to the saying of Jeremy Ierem. 1.19 I will rejoyce in them when I shall doe them good but it is wrought by the malice of our nature that hee is compelled like a most loving father to chasten and instruct us by the rod of discipline Afflictions are sent as chastisments temporary to the elect but eternall to the reprobate to the intent to save them which otherwise should perish to this intent hee did often times afflict and scourge the people of Israel because of their intollerable sins and rebellion to bow and turne them unto himselfe so he doth punish sinners to the intent they should leave off their trade of sinning and turne unto him and amend their lives thus the godly be exercised in the faith of Gods providence to the intent that knowing their owne weaknesse they may put their trust in their Lord God and have hope upon him Eccles 51. whose aid doth comfort them in all their afflictions and who in his good time will bring them out of all their troubles thus they be trained up to call upon the Lord in whom they doe depend in stedfast trust and hope and not in the vaine hope and trust in man or worldly meanes and to offer the sacrifice of continuall praise unto God by whom they have hope to be delivered out of all their afflictions Afflictions do confirme the faith of the godly Patience and sufferance of afflictions maketh our faith strong whereupon commeth our hope which doth not confound this is the assurance of our salvation when a man hath a tryed faith towards God and an assured hope against all temptations as armed against the very gates of Hell Againe Iob 5.15 c. wee be not onely allowed and well tryed by afflictions to be the sonnes of God By affliction we be brough to be the children of God and be assured of his care of us 2 Cor. 1.3 4. but the very care of God is commended unto us whereby hee doth marvellously comfort the afflicted of this the Apostle maketh mention saying Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which is the father of mercies and the God of all comfort which doth comfort us in all our tribulations like as the passions of Christ doe abound in us so by the grace of Christ our comfort doth more abound and David saith According to the multitude of the sorrowes in my heart thy comforts doe rejoyce my soule Psal 93.19 so that by the grace of God the troubled and afflicted are comforted in all their troubles and afflictions in these extremities the afflicted have great need to be strengthned and cōfirmed in the grace of Christ Without faith wee cannot have the comfort of the Spirit to believe that they be chastened exercised reformed tryed and saved from ruine and destruction by the immediate hand of God their heavenly father unlesse that they have this faith they cannot have the comfort of the Spirit wee must have also stedfast hope whereby wee must not doubt but that God in his mercy and in his good time shall once deliver us from all our tribulations crosses and afflictions which by his chastening hand and in his love he hath laid upon us this hope cometh of faith in that we doe believe that God is faithfull standing to all his promises and able to performe what he hath promised and that he will not suffer us to be tempted further than we be able to beare and that this hope is not vaine it appeareth by that which God himselfe faith Psal 91.1 c. For as hee hoped upon mee I will deliver him out of all his tribulations and afflictions after his stedfast faith and strong hope there followeth that unknowne and exceeding commendable vertue Patience of these three most excellent vertues doth come the rejoycement of the spirit Acts 5. So St. Paul doth testifie that he doth not onely rejoyce in the hope of the glory of Gods children but also rejoyce in their troubles James 1. and Saint James saith My brethren Rom. 5. count it all joy when yee fall into divers temptations knowing that the triall of your faith worketh patience therefore we must so beare our
afflictions that wee must abide them not onely patiently but with joy also through faith and hope Whosoever is wretched and afflicted is to be pitied and relieved for that he is distressed and afflicted the Samaritan which is spoken of in the Gospel did pity Luk 10.30 c. relieve and helpe him that was falne into the hands of thieves having no respect of his Country or religion but in consideration that hee was a man himselfe hee had compassion and tooke pitty of the miserable case and perill of the man distressed therefore it is a good and charitable deed and to be used of all men towards their Christian brethren to relieve helpe succour and comfort the needy distressed and afflicted person not onely for that hee is afflicted but for his Saviour Christ his sake who hath commanded it wee ought to doe good to all men as the Apostle saith Gal. 6.10 Especially to them which are of the houshold of faith there must mercy also be shewed unto him that is chastened for his sinnes God is well pleased withall and doth require it as wee may perceive in Esay where he charged the Moabites lovingly to entreat the Israelites whom hee had scourged for their sinnes Hide the chased saith he Esay 16.3 4. and bewray not them that are fled let them that are persecuted dwell with thee and be thou their refuge Therefore seeing that it is a worke of true goodnesse to have pitty and mercy upon the distressed and afflicted wee ought not to enquire after their religion life and occasion of their affliction at what time wee ought to succour them but for compassion sake to bestow our ayd and reliefe upon them in their distresse and miseries as men afflicted for their misery and affliction doth sufficiently declare their wants and necessities but when the afflicted is thus perplexed vexed grieved and in anguish they must patiently suffer and beare them and not despairingly runne to desperation nor to rest dissolute and carelesse what become of them but they must in Christs Name repaire unto God who although he be offended will yet shew mercy for hee doth not cast off upon every offence nor revenge every wrong as the world doth Luke 15.20 but like the Father of that unthrifty sonne receiveth againe him that strayed and lovingly imbraceth him that returneth unto him by true and serious repentance faithfull prayer and holy contemplation and uprightnesse of living with the consideration of Gods purpose in afflicting him for hee may not censure these evils or the least of them to come by chance as the world often and most rashly and unadvisedly affirmeth or that they befall him by reason of the unfortunate Planet Psal 73.5 Esay 47.13 under which he was borne as the starre-gazer fondly maintaineth for the Lord God Almighty that high and incomprehensible Jehovah Revel 1.8 that everlasting Alpha and Omega He which was and is and is to come he is the former framer creator preserver and governour of all things and who but hee made and prepared those famous starres in the Firmament Iob 38. Esay 51.13 Psal 89.13 Arcturus Orion and Pleiades who spread forth the Heavens like a curtaine who limited the North and South climates who made the Sunne and Moone but hee and therefore let all men thinke that his creatures which he hath formed framed and placed for the use and behoofe of man for the distinction of times and seasons and to give light unto the earth and his creatures thereon keepe every of them his Sphere as a walke whereas unto a continuall taske they are tyed by the omnipotent Commander who keepeth them without variation in the first course doing their continuall service and labour for the behoofe of man as other creatures doe and are not as Gods or governours of mans nature neither can they dispose of their inclinations constitutions or affections or make them happy or unhappy but are ruled governed and commanded by God as other inferiour creatures are to stand and move at his pleasure the Sunne stood still in Gibeon and the Moone in the Valley of Aialon Iosh 10.13 2 King 20.10 and that for a whole day so the Sunne at the commandement of the Lord retyred ten degrees in the Firmament as a signe for Hezechias health which proveth that these creatures are as all other even subject to the will of the superiour Governour who needeth not the helpe of such weake meanes to worke the long or short life of man the happy or unhappy estate of man the poore or rich portion of man 1 Sam. 2.6 7 8 or any matter belonging to the soule or body of man but all cometh from his sacred wisedome and divine providence all men are in his hands as the clay in the Potters and he frameth and forgeth of all formes and fashions Rom. 9.21 some to honour some to dishonour some to bee high some to bee low some to bee rich some to be poore some to be reverenced and some to bee despised afflicted and persecuted and every man must rest contented with his portion bee it good or bad sweet or sowre And therefore bee not so hardy and voyd of reason as to dreame that thy constitution inclination good or bad successe in thy proceedings the prosperous or adverse issues of thine endeavours thine estate poore or rich or thy troubles and afflictions proceedeth from the influence dominion rule or power of these creatures but that a divine and supernaturall cause worketh that in thee which the wit of man cannot conceive wherein though the world afford thee no comfort All our afflictions troubles miseries and calamities which happen unto us commeth of our sinnes yet art thou bound by an inward bond of duty to acknowledge all thine infirmities all thine afflictions and all the crosses which happen and fall upon thee to proceed even from thine owne sinnes and filthy corruptions as buffets to rouze thee from the forgetfulnesse of thy duty to his sacred Majesty for thy roving and ranging astray after vaine and foolish things superfluous desires and overmuch negligence of thy calling and in great love and favour doth thy loving father give thee these gentle corrections even of mercy to reclaime thee from the way of sinne unto a more sincere and sacred course of life Heb. 12. So that the troubles and miseries and all the adverse things that can befall us are Gods gentle chastisements to his children to reforme them but to the obstinate and unbeleeving they are messengers of his judgements Numb 14.2 Judg 6. Judg. 10. and utter renunciation who by his punishments waxe worse and worse who doe murmure and grudge at the course he taketh to amend them as did the rebellious Israelites whom he did often visit in mercy before he entred into judgement with them hee calleth us by his punishments from perils to the end wee should not be subject to the dangerous security of a pleasing estate
here in this world wherewith he seeth us apt to be intangled he doth as it were fetter us with the shackles of adversity that we should not have scope to daunce after the Musicke and sweet syrens tunes of this worlds happinesse which so enchaunteth men of liberty and lovers thereof that they are thereby led as it were by a golden line to the everlasting pit but for the truely penitent and faithfull believer he hath prepared and provided an endlesse rich and surpassing Diadem of absolute glory Rom. 8.17 18. a beautifull City the Kingdome of joy the Kingdome of eternall consolation If with patience they beare this moment of tryall and fatherly light yoake though to flesh and blood most sharpe and unsavory yet will hee mixe them with spirituall sweetnesse and inward consolation God dealeth most providently for his children and turneth even their teares into great joy and their lamentations into songs of melody and although his working seemes strange unto flesh and blood and hard measure to be crossed yet God seeth it necessary for us therefore take it not grievously to fall into troubles to sustaine miseries to endure crosses and to abide afflictions neither thinke it strange for as the Apostle Saint James saith James 5. it hath beene the portion of Gods dearest children from the beginning and will be for ever found true Psal 91.14 c that Great are the troubles of the righteous and as true it is that the Lord will delivers them out of all Dan. 3. What greater danger could there be then to be in the firie furnace as was Sidrach Misach and Abednego yet did the Lord so qualifie the force of the fire mortifying as it were the nature thereof that it nothing annoyed them yet it did consume the ministers of their execution What greater perill could there be then to be in the Lyons denne with Daniel Dan. 6.16 24. yet the Lord shut up the mouthes of the Lyons that they could not hurt him but yet they devoured his accusers It is much to be in misery in want in sicknesse 1 King 19. Judg. 15.18 Luk. 16.20 21. and full of sores with Job to be in hunger with Elias to thirst with Samson poore sore and naked with Lazarus imprisoned and accused with Joseph persecuted banished and in exile with David with Jeremy with Peter Gen. 3.9 1 Sam. 21.22 27. Acts 14.19 to be stoned with Paul and infinite others yet did the Lord deliver them out of all their troubles such is the force of a sound confidence and trust in the Almighty God who in mercy worketh by outward crosses the inward comfort of his children and sheweth compassion alwaies upon them according to the multitude of his mercies And as sin is the root from whence springeth all our afflictions crosses miseries and calamities both inward and outward and our offences is the cause of Gods displeasure against us and God in his displeasure powreth forth both crosses and curses upon sinners Temporary to the elect and eternall to the reprobate therfore it behooveth every man carefully to consider the cause of his troubles whether hee be falne into the same by his owne riot wanton lascivious or licencious life and by his ungodly conversation and neglect of the feare of God for which things sake Ephes 5.6 Col. 3.6 the wrath of God comes upon the children of disobedience and he powreth out of the cup of his indignation upon them either in judgement to their condemnation The reprobate cannot breath one thought of repentance and so to be perpetuall or else to recall and reclame them from their wicked waies that they may be saved and so to live for ever Therefore let every man acknowledge and confesse their sins unto God be truly penitent and crave pardon for them Esay 49.8 and fall downe before him in hearty prayer and he will heare them grant their requests and deliver them out of all their troubles and afflictions and give them the reward of everlasting life for we cannot be so ready to come unto God by prayers God accepteth of our desires in stead of performance but he is as ready to meete our petitions and in a most fatherly loving manner hee imbraces us and graciously accepteth of our humble desires so that the godly men have no cause to faint undet the burthen of their miseries but that they may thereby the rather gather unto themselves continually more and more strength through the benefit and supply of Gods continuall inward succour and comfort for even their adversities their bitter afflictions and their miserable calamities shall all turne to their blisse Psalm 32. and perpetuall commodity Great plagues remain for the ungodly but whose putteth his trust in the Lord mercy imbraceth him on every side Generall Rules directing a Christian in a godly life EVery day thou drawest neerer to thy death judgement and eternity therefore thinke every day how thou mayest be able to stand in that most strict and severe judgement of God and so live for ever keepe therefore diligent watch over all thy thoughts words and actions Eccles 12.13 14. Ephes 4.2 3. because hereafter thou must give an exact account for them at the last day of judgement whether it be good or evill be carefull to suppresse every sinne in the first motion before it be ripe in thee let sinne be to thy heart a stranger 1 Sam. 12.3 4. not a home-dweller take heed of falling oft into one and the same sin lest the custome of sinning take away the conscience of sinne and then shalt thou waxe so impudently wicked that thou wilt neither feare God nor reverence men which to avoid thinke every evening that thou shalt dye that night and thinke every morning that thou shalt dye that day doe not therefore deferre thy conversion and thy good workes till to morrow for to morrow is uncertaine but death is most certaine and every day hangs over thy head nothing is more contrary to godlinesse then delay If therefore thou contemnest the inward calling of the holy Spirit Ecclesiast 18.22 c. thou shalt never attaine to true conversion Deferre not therefore thy conversion and good workes till thy old age but offer unto God the flowre of thy youth for no age is fitter for Gods service then youth which flourisheth in strength both of body and mind and as thou tenderest the salvation of thy soule live not in any wilfull filthinesse for true faith and purpose of sinning can never stand together approve thy selfe to be a true servant of Christ and study alwaies to walke in the way of the Lord and thinke of the worlds vanity to contemne it of death to expect it of judgement to avoid it of hell to escape it and of heaven to desire it consider in every thing the end before thou dost attempt the action let thy conscience deterre thee to eschew every knowne sin